Sorry for the delay in responding,dear friend. As I mentioned in the last post, my time is limited due to my Mothers illness and being busy with work
To start with, let me take the worry off your mind of thinking I felt challenged and got huffy like you mentioned in your post.I did not feel challenged and get huffy. I apologize for misjudging your style of writing and calling you snarky.
As far as this topic goes it’s best I use the encyclical ECCLESIA DE EUCHARISTIA rather than me not express this correctly.
The Church constantly draws her life from the redeeming sacrifice; she approaches it not only through faith-filled remembrance, but also through a real contact, since this sacrifice is made present ever anew, sacramentally perpetuated, in every community which offers it at the hands of the consecrated minister. The Eucharist thus applies to men and women today the reconciliation won once for all by Christ for mankind in every age. The sacrifice of Christ and the sacrifice of the Eucharist are one single sacrifice.14 Saint John Chrysostom put it well: We always offer the same Lamb, not one today and another tomorrow, but always the same one. For this reason the sacrifice is always only one... Even now we offer that victim who was once offered and who will never be consumed.15
The Mass makes present the sacrifice of the Cross; it does not add to that sacrifice nor does it multiply it.16 What is repeated is its memorial celebration, its commemorative representation (memorialis demonstratio),17 which makes Christ’s one, definitive redemptive sacrifice always present in time. The sacrificial nature of the Eucharistic mystery cannot therefore be understood as something separate, independent of the Cross or only indirectly referring to the sacrifice of Calvary.
13. By virtue of its close relationship to the sacrifice of Golgotha, the Eucharist is a sacrifice in the strict sense, and not only in a general way, as if it were simply a matter of Christ’s offering himself to the faithful as their spiritual food. The gift of his love and obedience to the point of giving his life (cf. Jn 10:17-18) is in the first place a gift to his Father. Certainly it is a gift given for our sake, and indeed that of all humanity (cf. Mt 26:28; Mk 14:24; Lk 22:20; Jn 10:15), yet it is first and foremost a gift to the Father: asacrifice that the Father accepted, giving, in return for this total self-giving by his Son, who ‘became obedient unto death’ (Phil 2:8), his own paternal gift, that is to say the grant of new immortal life in the resurrection.18
In giving his sacrifice to the Church, Christ has also made his own the spiritual sacrifice of the Church, which is called to offer herself in union with the sacrifice of Christ. This is the teaching of the Second Vatican Council concerning all the faithful: Taking part in the Eucharistic Sacrifice, which is the source and summit of the whole Christian life, they offer the divine victim to God, and offer themselves along with it.19
14. Christ’s passover includes not only his passion and death, but also his resurrection. This is recalled by the assembly’s acclamation following the consecration: We proclaim your resurrection. The Eucharistic Sacrifice makes present not only the mystery of the Saviour’s passion and death, but also the mystery of the resurrection which crowned his sacrifice. It is as the living and risen One that Christ can become in the Eucharist the bread of life (Jn 6:35, 48), the living bread (Jn 6:51). Saint Ambrose reminded the newly-initiated that the Eucharist applies the event of the resurrection to their lives: Today Christ is yours, yet each day he rises again for you.20 Saint Cyril of Alexandria also makes clear that sharing in the sacred mysteries is a true confession and a remembrance that the Lord died and returned to life for us and on our behalf.21
15. The sacramental re-presentation of Christ’s sacrifice, crowned by the resurrection, in the Mass involves a most special presence which in the words of Paul VI is called ‘real’ not as a way of excluding all other types of presence as if they were ‘not real’, but because it is a presence in the fullest sense: a substantial presence whereby Christ, the God-Man, is wholly and entirely present.22 This sets forth once more the perennially valid teaching of the Council of Trent: the consecration of the bread and wine effects the change of the whole substance of the bread into the substance of the body of Christ our Lord, and of the whole substance of the wine into the substance of his blood. And the holy Catholic Church has fittingly and properly called this change transubstantiation.23 Truly the Eucharist is a mysterium fidei, a mystery which surpasses our understanding and can only be received in faith, as is often brought out in the catechesis of the Church Fathers regarding this divine sacrament: Do not see Saint Cyril of Jerusalem exhorts in the bread and wine merely natural elements, because the Lord has expressly said that they are his body and his blood: faith assures you of this, though your senses suggest otherwise.24
Adoro te devote, latens Deitas, we shall continue to sing with the Angelic Doctor. Before this mystery of love, human reason fully experiences its limitations. One understands how, down the centuries, this truth has stimulated theology to strive to understand it ever more deeply.
These are praiseworthy efforts, which are all the more helpful and insightful to the extent that they are able to join critical thinking to the living faith of the Church, as grasped especially by the Magisterium’s sure charism of truth and the intimate sense of spiritual realities25 which is attained above all by the saints. There remains the boundary indicated by Paul VI: Every theological explanation which seeks some understanding of this mystery, in order to be in accord with Catholic faith, must firmly maintain that in objective reality, independently of our mind, the bread and wine have ceased to exist after the consecration, so that the adorable body and blood of the Lord Jesus from that moment on are really before us under the sacramental species of bread and wine.26
16. The saving efficacy of the sacrifice is fully realized when the Lord’s body and blood are received in communion. The Eucharistic Sacrifice is intrinsically directed to the inward union of the faithful with Christ through communion; we receive the very One who offered himself for us, we receive his body which he gave up for us on the Cross and his blood which he poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins (Mt 26:28). We are reminded of his words: As the living Father sent me, and I live because of the Father, so he who eats me will live because of me (Jn 6:57). Jesus himself reassures us that this union, which he compares to that of the life of the Trinity, is truly realized. The Eucharist is a true banquet, in which Christ offers himself as our nourishment. When for the first time Jesus spoke of this food, his listeners were astonished and bewildered, which forced the Master to emphasize the objective truth of his words: Truly, truly, I say to you, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life within you (Jn 6:53). This is no metaphorical food: My flesh is food indeed, and my blood is drink indeed (Jn 6:55).
17. Through our communion in his body and blood, Christ also grants us his Spirit. Saint Ephrem writes: He called the bread his living body and he filled it with himself and his Spirit...
He who eats it with faith, eats Fire and Spirit... Take and eat this, all of you, and eat with it the Holy Spirit. For it is truly my body and whoever eats it will have eternal life.27 The Church implores this divine Gift, the source of every other gift, in the Eucharistic epiclesis. In the Divine Liturgy of Saint John Chrysostom, for example, we find the prayer: We beseech, implore and beg you: send your Holy Spirit upon us all and upon these gifts... that those who partake of them may be purified in soul, receive the forgiveness of their sins, and share in the Holy Spirit.28 And in the Roman Missal the celebrant prays: grant that we who are nourished by his body and blood may be filled with his Holy Spirit, and become one body, one spirit in Christ.29 Thus by the gift of his body and blood Christ increases within us the gift of his Spirit, already poured out in Baptism and bestowed as a seal in the sacrament of Confirmation.
18. The acclamation of the assembly following the consecration appropriately ends by expressing the eschatological thrust which marks the celebration of the Eucharist (cf. 1 Cor 11:26): until you come in glory. The Eucharist is a straining towards the goal, a foretaste of the fullness of joy promised by Christ (cf. Jn 15:11); it is in some way the anticipation of heaven, the pledge of future glory.30 In the Eucharist, everything speaks of confident waiting in joyful hope for the coming of our Saviour, Jesus Christ.31 Those who feed on Christ in the Eucharist need not wait until the hereafter to receive eternal life: they already possess it on earth, as the first-fruits of a future fullness which will embrace man in his totality. For in the Eucharist we also receive the pledge of our bodily resurrection at the end of the world: He who eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day (Jn 6:54). This pledge of the future resurrection comes from the fact that the flesh of the Son of Man, given as food, is his body in its glorious state after the resurrection. With the Eucharist we digest, as it were, the secret of the resurrection. For this reason Saint Ignatius of Antioch rightly defined the Eucharistic Bread as a medicine of immortality, an antidote to death.32
That is some strange theology there.
Jesus is Almighty God incarnate (in the flesh) and his one-time sacrifice was to be a propitiation for the sins of the world - past, present and future. How can Jesus' sacrifice be considered a "gift to the Father"? Then to say that the Father gives the gift back to Jesus by granting him a "new immortal life in the resurrection"? I tend to think this was added as a type of "filler" to somehow tie together the concept of the gift of eternal life WE are given by God by His grace and the developed dogma of the sacrament of the Eucharist. This gift is received by faith - by believing in Christ as Savior and Lord. The ordinance of the Lord's Supper is done in REMEMBRANCE of Him - just as Jesus said it was to be done.
The idea of the Eucharistic sacrament being itself propitiatory - to take care of newly committed sins for which payment must be made for the individual after a "proper" confession and suitable penance - is a doctrine that developed over a long period of time for the Roman Catholic Church. It was NOT something the early church fathers held to much less the Apostles and certainly not the Lord Jesus Christ. You'll find no Scripture that teaches that. Christ's sacrifice was once for all and can never be repeated. Those who have received Him by faith ARE redeemed, justified, sanctified, made righteous and saved. The celebration of the Lord's Supper serves to keep that wonderful good news always in our thoughts and hearts so that we remember how much we are loved by God and the fellowship of the Body of Christ.
You never answered the question. Go back.